Ocampo V Enriquez
Ocampo V Enriquez
Ocampo V Enriquez
Enriquez, et al., G.R. Nos. 225973, 225984, 226097, 226116, The Supreme Court denied the petitions.
226120 & 226294, November 8, 2016
Procedural issues
Facts:
Political question
During the campaign period for the 2016 Presidential Election, then
candidate Rodrigo R. Duterte publicly announced that he would allow The Court agrees with the OSG that President Duterte's decision to
the burial former President Ferdinand E. Marcos at the Libingan ng have the remains of Marcos interred at the LNMB involves a political
Mga Bayani ("LNMB"). Duterte won the May 9, 2016 elections. question that is not a justiciable controversy. In the excercise of his
powers under the Constitution and the Administrative Code of 1987 to
On August 7, 2016, Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana issued a allow the interment of Marcos at the LNMB, which is a land of the
Memorandum to AFP Chief of Staff General Ricardo R. Visaya public domain devoted for national military cemetery and military
regarding the interment of former President Ferdinand E. Marcos at shrine purposes, President Duterte decided a question of policy based
the Libingan ng Mga Bayani. on his wisdom that it shall promote national healing and forgiveness.
There being no taint of grave abuse in the exercise of such discretion,
On August 9, 2016, AFP Rear Admiral Ernesto C. Enriquez issued a as discussed below, President Duterte's decision on that political
directive to the Philippine Army on the Funeral Honors and Service for question is outside the ambit of judicial review.
President Marcos.
Locus standi
Dissatisfied with the foregoing issuance, the petitioners filed a Petition
for Certiorari and Prohibition and Petition for Mandamus and Petitioners have no legal standing to file the petitions for certiorari,
Prohibition with the Court. prohibition and mandamus because they failed to show that they have
suffered or will suffer direct and personal injury as a result of the
ISSUES interment of Marcos at the LNMB.
1) Whether respondents Defense Secretary and AFP Rear Admiral Petitioners cannot also file as taxpayers. They merely claim illegal
committed grave abuse of discretion when they issued the assailed disbursement of public funds, without showing that Marcos is
memorandum and directive in compliance with the verbal order of disqualified to be interred at the LNMB by either express or implied
President Duterte to implement his election campaign promise to have provision of the Constitution, the laws or jurisprudence.
the remains of Marcos interred at the LNMB?
Petitioners Saguisag, et al., as members of the Bar, failed to disclose
2) Whether the issuance and implementation of the assailed the direct or potential injury which they may suffer as a result of the
memorandum and directive violated the Constitution, and domestic act complained of. Their interest in this case is too general and shared
and international laws? by other groups, such that their duty to uphold the rule of law,
without more, is inadequate to clothe them with requisite legal
3) Whether historical facts, laws enacted to recover ill-gotten wealth standing.
from the Marcoses and their cronies, and the pronouncements of the
Court on the Marcos regime have nullified his entitlement as a soldier Petitioners also failed to prove that the case is of transcendental
and former President to interment at the LNMB? importance. At this point in time, the interment of Marcos at a
cemetery originally established as a national military cemetery and
4) Whether the Marcos family is deemed to have waived the burial of declared a national shrine would have no profound effect on the
the remains of former President Marcos at the LNMB after they political, economic, and other aspects of our national life considering
entered into an agreement with the Government of the Republic of the that more than twenty-seven (27) years since his death and thirty
Philippines as to the conditions and procedures by which his remains (30) years after his ouster have already passed. Significantly,
shall be brought back to and interred in the Philippines? petitioners failed to demonstrate a clear and imminent threat to their
fundamental constitutional rights.
RULING
As to petitioners Senator De Lima and Congressman Lagman, they thereto, Congress enacted the Code of Conduct on Ethical Standards
failed to show that the burial of Marcos encroaches on their for Public Officials and Employees, the Ombudsman Act of 1989,
prerogatives as legislators. Plunder Act, and Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007. To complement these
statutes, the Executive Branch has issued various orders, memoranda,
Exhaustion of administrative remedies and instructions relative to the norms of behavior/code of
conduct/ethical standards of officials and employees; workflow
Petitioners violated the exhaustion of administrative charts/public transactions; rules and policies on gifts and benefits;
remedies. Contrary to their claim of lack of plain, speedy, adequate whistle blowing and reporting; and client feedback program
remedy in the ordinary course of law, petitioners should be faulted for
failing to seek reconsideration of the assailed memorandum and Petitioners' reliance on Sec. 3(2) of Art. XIV and Sec. 26 of Art. XVIII
directive before the Secretary ofNational Defense. The Secretary of of the Constitution is also misplaced. Sec. 3(2) of Art. XIV refers to
National Defense should be given opportunity to correct himself, if the constitutional duty of educational institutions in teaching the
warranted, considering that AFP Regulations G 161-375 was issued values of patriotism and nationalism and respect for human rights,
upon his order. Questions on the implementation and interpretation while Sec. 26 of Art. XVIII is a transitory provision on sequestration or
thereof demand the exercise of sound administrative discretion, freeze orders in relation to the recovery of Marcos' ill-gotten wealth.
requiring the special knowledge, experience and services of his office Clearly, with respect to these provisions, there is no direct or indirect
to determine technical and intricate matters of fact. If petitioners prohibition to Marcos' interment at the LNMB.
would still be dissatisfied with the decision of the Secretary, they
could elevate the matter before the Office of the President which has The second sentence of Sec. 17 of Art. VII is likewise not violated by
control and supervision over the Department of National Defense public respondents. Being the Chief Executive, the President
(DND). represents the government as a whole and sees to it that all laws are
enforced by the officials and employees of his or her
Hierarchy of Courts department. Under the Faithful Execution Clause, the President has
the power to take "necessary and proper steps" to carry into
While direct resort to the Court through petitions for the extraordinary execution the law. The mandate is self-executory by virtue of its being
writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus are allowed under inherently executive in nature and is intimately related to the other
exceptional cases, which are lacking in this case, petitioners cannot executive functions. It is best construed as an imposed obligation, not
simply brush aside the doctrine of hierarchy of courts that requires a separate grant of power. The provision simply underscores the rule
such petitions to be filed first with the proper Regional Trial Court of law and, corollarily, the cardinal principle that the President is not
(RTC). The RTC is not just a trier of facts, but can also resolve above the laws but is obliged to obey and execute them.
questions of law in the exercise of its original and concurrent
jurisdiction over petitions for certiorari, prohibition and mandamus, There is no violation of RA 289.
and has the power to issue restraining order and injunction when
proven necessary. Petitioners miserably failed to provide legal and historical bases as to
their supposition that the LNMB and the National Pantheon are one
Substantive issues and the same. This is not at all unexpected because the LNMB is
distinct and separate from the burial place envisioned in R.A. No
I. The President's decision to bury Marcos at the LNMB is in 289. The parcel of land subject matter of President Quirino's
accordance with the Constitution, the law and jurisprudence. Proclamation No. 431, which was later on revoked by President
Magsaysay's Proclamation No. 42, is different from that covered by
While the Constitution is a product of our collective history as a Marcos' Proclamation No. 208. The National Pantheon does not exist
people, its entirety should not be interpreted as providing guiding at present. To date, the Congress has deemed it wise not to
principles to just about anything remotely related to the Martial Law appropriate any funds for its construction or the creation of the Board
period such as the proposed Marcos burial at the LNMB. on National Pantheon. This is indicative of the legislative will not to
pursue, at the moment, the establishment of a singular interment
Section 1 of Article XI of the Constitution is not a self-executing place for the mortal remains of all Presidents of the Philippines,
provision considering that a law should be passed by the Congress to national heroes, and patriots.
clearly define and effectuate the principle embodied therein. Pursuant
Furthermore, to apply the standard that the LNMB is reserved only for Marcos at the LNMB. Whether petitioners admit it or not, the lessons
the "decent and the brave" or "hero" would be violative of public of Martial Law are already engraved, albeit in varying degrees, in the
policy as it will put into question the validity of the burial of each and hearts and minds of the present generation of Filipinos. As to the
every mortal remains resting therein, and infringe upon the principle unborn, it must be said that the preservation and popularization of our
of separation of powers since the allocation of plots at the LNMB is history is not the sole responsibility of the Chief Executive; it is a joint
based on the grant of authority to the President under existing laws and collective endeavor of every freedom-loving citizen of this
and regulations. Also, the Court shares the view of the OSG that the country.
proposed interment is not equivalent to the consecration of Marcos'
mortal remains. The act in itself does not confer upon him the status Notably, complementing the statutory powers and functions of the
of a "hero." Despite its name, which is actually a misnomer, the Human Rights Victims' Claims Board and the HRVV Memorial
purpose of the LNMB, both from legal and historical perspectives, has Commission in the memorialization of HRVV s, the National Historical
neither been to confer to the people buried there the title of "hero" Commission of the Philippines (NHCP), formerly known as the National
nor to require that only those interred therein should be treated as a Historical Institute (NHJ), is mandated to act as the primary
"hero." Lastly, petitioners' repeated reference to a "hero's burial" and government agency responsible for history and is authorized to
"state honors," without showing proof as to what kind of burial or determine all factual matters relating to official Philippine history.
honors that will be accorded to the remains of Marcos, is speculative
until the specifics of the interment have been finalized by public II. The President's decision to bury Marcos at the LNMB is not
respondents. done whimsically, capriciously or arbitrarily, out of malice, ill
will or personal bias.
No violation of RA 10639 .
The LNMB was not expressly included in the national shrines
The Court cannot subscribe to petitioners' logic that the beneficial enumerated in PD 105
provisions of R.A. No. 10368 are not exclusive as it includes the
prohibition on Marcos' burial at the LNMB. It would be undue to P.D. No. 105 does not apply to the LNMB. Despite the fact that P.D.
extend the law beyond what it actually contemplates. With its victim- No. 208 predated P.D. No. 105, the LNMB was not expressly included
oriented perspective, our legislators could have easily inserted a in the national shrines enumerated in the latter. The proposition that
provision specifically proscribing Marcos' interment at the LNMB as a the LNMB is implicitly covered in the catchall phrase "and others which
"reparation" for the Human Rights Violations Victims (HRVVs). The law may be proclaimed in the future as National Shrines" is erroneous
is silent and should remain to be so. This Court cannot read into the because: (1) As stated, Marcos issued P.D. No. 208 prior to P.D. No.
law what is simply not there. It is irregular, if not unconstitutional, for 105; (2) Following the canon of statutory construction known as
Us to presume the legislative will by supplying material details into ejusdem generis, 138 the LNMB is not a site "of the birth, exile,
the law. That would be tantamount to judicial legislation. imprisonment, detention or death of great and eminent leaders of the
nation,"; and (3) Since its establishment, the LNMB has been a
The enforcement of the HRVV s' rights under R.A. No 10368 will surely military shrine under the jurisdiction of the PVAO.
not be impaired by the interment of Marcos at the LNMB. As opined by
the OSG, the assailed act has no causal connection and legal relation Assuming that P.D. No. 105 is applicable, the descriptive words
to the law. The subject memorandum and directive of public "sacred and hallowed" refer to the LNMB as a place and not to each
respondents do not and cannot interfere with the statutory powers and every mortal remains interred therein. Hence, the burial of
and functions of the Board and the Commission. More importantly, the Marcos at the LNMB does not diminish said cemetery as a revered and
HRVVs' entitlements to the benefits provided for by R.A. No 10368 respected ground. Neither does it negate the presumed individual or
and other domestic laws are not curtailed. R.A. No. 10368 does not collective "heroism" of the men and women buried or will be buried
amend or repeal, whether express or implied, the provisions of the therein. The "nation's esteem and reverence for her war dead, " as
Administrative Code or AFP Regulations G 161-375. originally contemplated by President Magsaysay in issuing
Proclamation No. 86, still stands unaffected. That being said, the
There is no violation of International Human Rights Laws. interment of Marcos, therefore, does not constitute a violation of the
physical, historical, and cultural integrity of the LNMB as a national
The nation's history will not be instantly revised by a single resolve of military shrine.
President Duterte, acting through the public respondents, to bury
The LNMB is considered as a national shrine for military memorials. d) Chiefs of Staff, AFP; ( e) General/Flag Officers of the AFP; (f) Active
The PVAO, which is empowered to administer, develop, and maintain and retired military personnel of the AFP to include active draftees and
military shrines, is under the supervision and control of the DND. The trainees who died in line of duty, active reservists and CAFGU Active
DND, in tum, is under the Office of the President. Auxiliary (CAA) who died in combat operations or combat related
activities; (g) Former members of the AFP who laterally entered or
The presidential power of control over the Executive Branch of joined the PCG and the PNP; (h) Veterans of Philippine Revolution of
Government is a self-executing provision of the Constitution and does 1890, WWI, WWII and recognized guerillas; (i) Government
not require statutory implementation, nor may its exercise be limited, Dignitaries, Statesmen, National Artists and other deceased persons
much less withdrawn, by the legislature. This is why President Duterte whose interment or reinterment has been approved by the
is not bound by the alleged 1992 Agreement between former Commander-in-Chief, Congress or the Secretary of National Defense;
President Ramos and the Marcos family to have the remains of Marcos and G) Former Presidents, Secretaries of Defense, Dignitaries,
interred in Batac, Ilocos Norte. As the incumbent President, he is free Statesmen, National Artists, widows of Former Presidents, Secretaries
to amend, revoke or rescind political agreements entered into by his of National Defense and Chief of Staff.
predecessors, and to determine policies which he considers, based on
informed judgment and presumed wisdom, will be most effective in Similar to AFP Regulations G 161-374, the following are not qualified
carrying out his mandate. to be interred in the LNMB: (a) Personnel who were dishonorably
separated/reverted/discharged from the service; and (b) Authorized
Moreover, under the Administrative Code, the President has the power personnel who were convicted by final judgment of an offense
to reserve for public use and for specific public purposes any of the involving moral turpitude.
lands of the public domain and that the reserved land shall remain
subject to the specific public purpose indicated until otherwise In the absence of any executive issuance or law to the contrary, the
provided by law or proclamation. At present, there is no law or AFP Regulations G 161-375 remains to be the sole authority in
executive issuance specifically excluding the land in which the LNMB is determining who are entitled and disqualified to be interred at the
located from the use it was originally intended by the past Presidents. LNMB. Interestingly, even if they were empowered to do so, former
The allotment of a cemetery plot at the LNMB for Marcos as a former Presidents Corazon C. Aquino and Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III, who
President and Commander-in-Chief, a legislator, a Secretary of were themselves aggrieved at the Martial Law, did not revise the rules
National Defense, a military personnel, a veteran, and a Medal of by expressly prohibiting the burial of Marcos at the LNMB. The validity
Valor awardee, whether recognizing his contributions or simply his of AFP Regulations G 161-375 must, therefor, be sustained for having
status as such, satisfies the public use requirement. The disbursement been issued by the AFP Chief of Staff acting under the direction of the
of public funds to cover the expenses incidental to the burial is Secretary of National Defense, who is the alter ego of the President.
granted to compensate him for valuable public services rendered.
AFP Regulations G 161-375 should not be stricken down in the
Likewise, President Duterte's determination to have Marcos' remains absence of clear and unmistakable showing that it has been issued
interred at the LNMB was inspired by his desire for national healing with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
and reconciliation. Presumption of regularity in the performance of jurisdiction. Neither could it be considered ultra vires for purportedly
official duty prevails over petitioners' highly disputed factual allegation providing incomplete, whimsical, and capricious standards for
that, in the guise of exercising a presidential prerogative, the Chief qualification for burial at the LNMB.
Executive is actually motivated by utang na loob (debt of gratitude)
and bayad utang (payback) to the Marcoses. As the purpose is not It is not contrary to the "well-established custom," as the dissent
self-evident, petitioners have the burden of proof to establish the described it, to argue that the word "bayani" in the LNMB has become
factual basis of their claim. They failed. Even so, this Court cannot a misnomer since while a symbolism of heroism may attach to the
take cognizance of factual issues since We are not a trier of facts. LNMB as a national shrine for military memorial, the same does not
automatically attach to its feature as a military cemetery and to those
AFP Regulations G 161-375 must be sustained. who were already laid or will be laid therein. As stated, the purpose of
the LNMB, both from the legal and historical perspectives, has neither
Under AFP Regulations G 161-375, the following are eligible for been to confer to the people buried there the title of "hero" nor to
interment at the LNMB: (a) Medal of Valor Awardees; (b) Presidents require that only those interred therein should be treated as a "hero."
or Commanders-in-Chief, AFP; ( c) Secretaries of National Defense; (
In fact, the privilege of internment at the LNMB has been loosen up and substantial distinction between a military personnel and a former
through the years. Since 1986, the list of eligible includes not only President. The conditions of dishonorable discharge under the Articles
those who rendered active military service or military-related activities of War attach only to the members of the military. There is also no
but also non-military personnel who were recognized for their substantial distinction between Marcos and the three Philippine
significant contributions to the Philippine society (such as government Presidents buried at the LNMB (Presidents Quirino, Garcia, and
dignitaries, statesmen, national artists, and other deceased persons Macapagal). All of them were not convicted of a crime involving moral
whose interment or reinterment has been approved by the turpitude. In addition, the classification between a military personnel
Commander-in-Chief, Congress or Secretary of National Defense). In and a former President is germane to the purposes of Proclamation
1998, the widows of former Presidents, Secretaries of National No. 208 and P.D. No. 1076. While the LNMB is a national shrine for
Defense and Chief of Staff were added to the list. Whether or not the military memorials, it is also an active military cemetery that
extension of burial privilege to civilians is unwarranted and should be recognizes the status or position held by the persons interred therein.
restricted in order to be consistent with the original purpose of the
LNMB is immaterial and irrelevant to the issue at bar since it is Likewise, Marcos was honorably discharged from military service.
indubitable that Marcos had rendered significant active military service PVAO expressly recognized him as a retired veteran pursuant to R.A.
and military-related activities. No. 6948, as amended. Petitioners have not shown that he was
dishonorably discharged from military service under APP Circular 17,
Petitioners did not dispute that Marcos was a former President and Series of 1987 (Administrative Discharge Prior to Expiration of Term of
Commander-in-Chief, a legislator, a Secretary of National Defense, a Enlistment) for violating Articles 94, 95 and 97 of the Articles of War.
military personnel, a veteran, and a Medal of Valor awardee. For his The NHCP study is incomplete with respect to his entire military career
alleged human rights abuses and corrupt practices, we may disregard as it failed to cite and include the official records of the AFP.
Marcos as a President and Commander-in-Chief, but we cannot deny
him the right to be acknowledged based on the other positions he held The word "service" in AFP Regulations G 161-375 should be construed
or the awards he received. In this sense, We agree with the as that rendered by a military person in the AFP, including civil
proposition that Marcos should be viewed and judged in his totality as service, from the time of his/her commission, enlistment, probation,
a person. While he was not all good, he was not pure evil either. training or drafting, up to the date of his/her separation or retirement
Certainly, just a human who erred like us. from the AFP. Civil service after honorable separation and retirement
from the AFP is outside the context of "service" under AFP Regulations
Aside from being eligible for burial at the LNMB, Marcos possessed G 161-375.
none of the disqualifications stated in AFP Regulations G 161-3 7 5.
He was neither convicted by final judgment of the offense involving Hence, it cannot be conveniently claimed that Marcos' ouster from the
moral turpitude nor dishonorably separated/reverted/discharged from presidency during the EDSA Revolution is tantamount to his
active military service. dishonorable separation, reversion or discharge from the military
service. The fact that the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the
The fact remains that Marcos was not convicted by final judgment of AFP under the 1987 Constitution only enshrines the principle of
any offense involving moral turpitude. No less than the 1987 supremacy of civilian authority over the military. Not being a military
Constitution mandates that a person shall not be held to answer for a person who may be prosecuted before the court martial, the President
criminal offense without due process of law. can hardly be deemed "dishonorably separated/reverted/discharged
from the service" as contemplated by AFP Regulations G 161-375.
Also, the equal protection clause is not violated. Generally, there is no Dishonorable discharge through a successful revolution is an extra-
property right to safeguard because even if one is eligible to be buried constitutional and direct sovereign act of the people which is beyond
at the LNMB, such fact would only give him or her the privilege to be the ambit of judicial review, let alone a mere administrative
interred therein. Unless there is a favorable recommendation from the regulation.
Commander- in-Chief, the Congress or the Secretary of National
Defense, no right can be said to have ripen. Until then, such inchoate It is undeniable that former President Marcos was forced out of office
right is not legally demandable and enforceable. by the people through the so-called EDSA Revolution. Said political act
of the people should not be automatically given a particular legal
Assuming that there is a property right to protect, the requisites of meaning other than its obvious consequence - that of ousting him as
equal protection clause are not met. 181 In this case, there is a real president. To do otherwise would lead the Court to the treacherous
and perilous path of having to make choices from multifarious refutations. Long after the clarifications made by this administration
inferences or theories arising from the various acts of the people. It is have been forgotten, the gravesite at the LNMB will remain. That is
not the function of the Court, for instance, to divine the exact the peculiar power of symbols in the public landscape—they are not
implications or significance of the number of votes obtained in only carriers of meaning but are repositories of public memory and
elections, or the message from the number of participants in public ultimately, history.
assemblies. If the Court is not to fall into the pitfalls of getting
embroiled in political and oftentimes emotional, if not acrimonious, For the Court to pretend that the present dispute is a simple
debates, it must remain steadfast in abiding by its recognized guiding question of the entitlement of a soldier to a military burial is to take a
stars - clear constitutional and legal rules - not by the uncertain, regrettably myopic view of the controversy. It would be to disregard
ambiguous and confusing messages from the actions of the people. historical truths and legal principles that persist after death. As
important, it would be to degrade the State’s duty to recognize the
pain of countless victims of Marcos and Martial Law. Regardless of the
B. Dissenting Opinions: promised national unity that the proposed burial will bring, I cannot,
in good conscience, support such an expedient and shortsighted view
Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno, in her dissent, affirmed that of Philippine history.”
the Court must take cognizance of the issues presented in order to
preserve the Constitution as well as the judiciary’s own prerogatives Senior Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio focused on Marcos’s
under the Constitution. She maintained that the President acted with ineligibility to be interred at LNMB because of the sovereign action of
grave abuse of discretion in ordering the interment at LNMB because the people of removing him from office as President and Commander-
it violated domestic law and international law in relation to the in-Chief.
obligations to do justice for human rights victims. After a review of
the applicable international agreements and protocols, the Chief
He argued that even assuming that Marcos, as Medal of Valor
Justice pointed out that the Philippines is bound to affirmatively
awardee, was qualified for interment at LNMB, he ceased to be
protect the rights of the human rights victims under martial law by
qualified when he was ousted on February 25, 1986. Citing Marcos v.
providing effective reparations, which would include monetary
Manglapus (1989), SAJ Carpio noted that the Court described Marcos
compensation as well as non-monetary remedies (such as symbolic
as “a dictator forced out of office and into exile after causing twenty
reparation). The Chief Justice pointed out that the interment of the
years of political, economic, and social havoc in the country.” He
Marcos remains at LNMB would be the antithesis of symbolic
noted that Marcos’s forcible removal in February 1986 amounted to
reparation. She also pointed out that the interment would run counter
“the strongest form of dishonorable discharge from office since it is
to the duty to combat impunity as well as to preserve memory—all of
meted out by the direct act of the sovereign people.”
which are international commitments that the Philippines is bound to
observe.
He pointed out that Marcos’s ouster is beyond judicial review and
must be accepted as an incontrovertible fact which has become part
The Chief Justice also took exception to the majority’s position that
of history. The removal was a direct exercise of the power of the
the interment would serve a public purpose, thus justifying the use of
Filipino people, which could not be called “honorable.”
public funds. She maintained that the recognition by both branches of
government—the legislative and judicial—that Marcos was a dictator,
plunderer and a human rights violator would preclude the interment at He disagreed with the majority’s contentions that Marcos could not be
LNMB as such act would run counter to the original intention of the considered dishonorably discharged as his separation was not in
LNMB. The invocation that the interment at LNMB would bring about accordance with the procedures and guidelines prescribed in Circular
national unity and healing, by itself, is insufficient to justify the use of 17, Series of 1987 of the Armed Forces of the Philippines because: (1)
public funds absent a public purpose. Marcos was separated from service before the circular was passed;
the circular, an administrative act, cannot be applied retrospectively
to undo a final act by the sovereign people; and (2) even assuming
Ending her dissent, the Chief Justice wrote that:
the circular applied to Marcos, he was still dishonorably discharged as
the incontrovertible fact of ouster that is beyond both judicial and
“Respondents may deny the implications of their actions today, but administrative review cannot be undone by a mere circular.
the symbolism of the burial will outlive even their most emphatic
SAJ Carpio also disagreed with the position that the disqualifications Given the present state of our Constitution, our laws, and our
under AFPR G 161-375 apply only to those in the active military jurisprudence, it is illegal for the remains of Ferdinand E. Marcos to be
service and do not apply to former Presidents. To subscribe to this interred at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. The Filipino people do not
view would negate the purpose for which the LNMB was originally deserve such a symbolism.”
established, which was to honor Filipino soldiers who fought for
freedom and democracy. SAJ Carpio pointed out that “(i)ndeed, Justice Leonen then argued that “Marcos is no hero. He was not even
Marcos is the very antithesis of freedom and democracy because he an exemplary public officer. He is not worthy of emulation and
was a dictator as declared by this Court.” inspiration by those who suffer poverty as a result of the opportunity
lost during his administration, by those who continue to suffer the
Moreover such a view would also be discriminatory against military trauma of the violations to the human dignity of their persons and of
personnel who are made subject to both qualifications and their family. He is certainly not worthy of emulation and inspiration by
disqualifications while non-military personnel, such as former those who do public service, including the lawyers, judges, and
Presidents, are subjected to the qualifications but not the justices who simply want to do what is right, protect others, and
disqualifications. conscientiously and diligently protect public funds entrusted to them.”
SAJ Carpio disagreed with the majority’s position that there was a His dissent focused on six points, thus:
public purpose for the interment of Marcos’s remains. Defining “public
policy” as “that principle which holds that no subject or citizen can 1. The General Orders which were the basis for the issuance of the
lawfully do that which has a tendency to be injurious to the public or questioned orders of public respondents are invalid because they
against the public good”, SAJ Carpio maintained that the President violate RA 289.
must implement the law considering the highest standards of 2. Assuming without accepting that AFP Regulations were valid
promoting the public good as embodied in the Constitution, when issued, the verbal orders of the President, the Memorandum of
international law and municipal statutes. Accordingly, SAJ Carpio the Secretary of National Defense, and the orders of respondent
argued that the DND Memorandum is contrary to public policy as it Enriquez all violate the requirement in RA 289, section 1 that those
would violate RA 10368. The President, in implementing the law, must buried must have led lives worthy of “inspiration and emulation.”
observe the standard of recognition of the rights of human rights 3. Assuming without conceding that the AFP regulations were valid
victims. Marcos’s interment at LNMB will cause injury particularly to when issued, the public respondents gravely abused their discretion
human rights victims of his regime and the sovereign people who when they failed to show, in view of the findings of the National
collectively ousted him. For this reason, he argues that the burial at Historical Commission of the Philippines, that they had sufficiently
LNMB is contrary to public policy. determined that there was factual basis to believe that the burial of
Marcos’s remains would be consistent with RA 289 and the various
Finally, SAJ Carpio points out that public funds cannot be spent for a proclamations relevant to the LNMB.
non-public purpose. Marcos’s ouster by a sovereign act of the Filipino 4. The President’s verbal orders, the memorandum of the Secretary
people constituted a dishonorable discharge; consequently, his of National Defense, and the orders of respondent Enriquez were
interment at LNMB serves to convert his burial into a private affair of issued with grave abuse of discretion because they violate RA 10368.
the Marcos family. No public purpose is served by transferring his 5. The President’s verbal orders, the memorandum of the Secretary
remains to LNMB and public funds cannot be used for this purpose. of National Defense, and the orders of respondent Enriquez cannot be
justified under the provisions of the Revised Administrative Code
Associate Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen started his dissent, thus: because there is no public purpose for the interment of Marcos’s
remains at LNMB.
“Under our constitutional order, Presidents, unlike kings, earn their 6. The actions of public respondents are contrary to the oath of
honors. As public servants, their position in itself should not be the office of the President because they encourage impunity, which is the
basis to glorify them. Neither will their place in history be determined result of rewarding the person who presided over human rights
by a successor President. Only the sovereign Filipino People deserve violations and who personally participated in the plunder of the public
to determine a President’s place in history. treasury.
Justice Alfredo Benjamin S. Caguioa pointed out that the order to inter
the remains for former President Marcos at LNMB is contrary to the
Constitution, the law, and several executive issuances that have the
force of law, as well as the public policy that the Constitution, the said
laws, and executive issuances espouse and advance.
He pointed out that the argument “that burying (Marcos) in the LNMB
does not make him a hero disregards the status of the LNMB as a
national shrine, the public policy in treating national shrines, the
standards set forth in these laws and executive issuances as well as in
the AFP LNMB burial regulations.” He also disagreed with the Solicitor
General’s argument that the President’s power to reserve land for a
public purpose under Section 14, Chapter IV, Book III of the Revised
Administrative Code of 1987 (RAC) was sufficient basis for the
President’s decision to inter the Marcos remains. On this, he noted
that the RAC provision (as well as Sec. 83 of CA 141 or The Public
Land Act) both required the President to exercise this power by
proclamation or executive order. The President’s order to inter is a
verbal order, which falls short of the manner prescribed by law for its
exercise.